
| By:
Emmet Pierce |
San
Diego Union - Tribune, February 4,2001 |
Reawakening: Builder returns to condo market after court ruling on defects
The San Diego region's long-slumbering condominium industry has
received an overdue wake-up call, insists veteran builder Mick
Pattinson.
A December state Supreme Court
decision that placed new limits on construction-defect litigation has
led the president of Barratt American to revive a long-delayed
condominium project in Temecula.
The moderately priced, 324-unit
development is expected to appeal to San Diegans who have been priced
out of the soaring single-family- home market. Although Barratt
American has owned the property for several years, a proliferation of
construction-defect suits led the builder to put the project on hold,
Pattinson said.
"We got out of the multifamily
business about three to four years ago," the builder said through
an English-country accent that some mistake for Australian. "When
this decision was received, we did push the button and actually begin
preparations. We should be building in late March or early
April."
The new project "is something of
an experiment, but it is a pretty big one," Pattinson said.
"It is not a full-scale commitment to return to this part of the
industry. What the building industry is waiting for is to see how the
trial lawyers react to the (Supreme Court) decision."
In a 5-2 ruling in December, the court
held that homeowners can't sue construction companies for negligence
unless there actually has been property damage or bodily injury.
California law doesn't allow people to
sue to prevent problems that might occur, the court asserted. The
justices pointed out that homeowners already benefit from remedies
available through builder warranties and contracts, which can cover
periods ranging from one to 10 years.
Alarmed foes of the decision hold that
it leaves homeowners vulnerable to builders who put profits ahead of
sound construction. In his dissent, Justice Stanley Mosk said he
regretted the court did not create even a minimal safeguard for
homeowners.
"The answer is quality control in
construction," said Douglas Grinnell, a local attorney who
handles construction-defect cases. "The problem that we have
experienced is, builders have not utilized quality superintendents who
will properly instruct the labor force."
According
to Thomas Miller, a veteran construction-defect attorney in Southern
California, one in two condominium developments reports major
construction defects and a third of those are involved in litigation.
He holds that faulty construction -- not lawyers--is to blame for
numerous lawsuits.
Builders strongly disagree. They
maintain that the quality of their homes is better than ever before.
Because of the court's ruling, other builders are likely to resume
condo construction, said Pattinson.
Condo construction nearly came to a
halt in the mid-1990s under the combined weight of the recession and
construction-defect litigation. Condominiums accounted for about 34
percent of the local home resale market in late 1989, according to
DataQuick Information Systems. As single-family home prices declined,
condos dropped to about 23 percent of resale market in 1994. Today,
condos again account for about 34 percent of resales.
Construction defect attorneys are
expected to ask state lawmakers to neutralize the high court's
decision. Lawmakers may be too busy with the state's energy woes to
intervene, however, Pattinson said.
"With the energy crisis with us,
it remains to be seen if legislators are going to want to get involved
with that. They have enough on their hands as it is."
In an effort to reassure buyers and to
shield his Temecula project against defect lawsuits, Pattinson will
have every stage of construction photographed or otherwise documented
by third-party inspectors. This has become a common practice among
builders, he said.
A persistent critic
Pattinson, who is vice president of
the California Building Industry Association, is a past president of
the San Diego Building Industry Association. He also is one of the
most persistent critics of attorneys and expert witnesses who
specialize in construction- defect suits.
Some say Pattinson's high profile in
the debate over defects may be the reason that many of his own
projects have been the target of lawsuits. Pattinson shrugs off the
notion that he may have drawn fire.
"It's fair to say there are
plenty of trial lawyers who don't like me," the builder said.
"That's OK because we all have to do what we have to do."
Pattinson is the right person to
champion the cause of developers, said Ure Kretowicz, chief executive
officer of Cornerstone Communities.
"He has been a tireless warrior
for the building industry not only in San Diego but on the state
level," he said.
Barratt American is the U.S.
subsidiary of Barratt Developments PLC, an international construction
company that's publicly traded in Britain. According to the company's
Web site, Barratt has built and sold more than 200,000 homes in the
United States and Europe.
"We have built probably about
16,000 homes over the last 20 years in Southern California and half of
those were multifamily," Pattinson said.
Pattinson, 52, joined Barratt in 1976
as a sales agent. He came to California in 1983 as a marketer,
experiencing both the boom of the '80s and the bust of the '90s. The
Englishman served a stint as marketing director for the international
parent company in Europe, but returned to California in 1991, becoming
president of Barratt American.
A matter of survival
Reining in construction-defect
litigation isn't simply a matter of builders maximizing profits,
Kretowicz insists. With the cost of single-family homes rising higher
and higher, eventually buyers will be forced to turn to
multiple-family dwellings.
Many San Diegans already have been
priced out of the single- family-home market. The county's median
price for a single-family home in December 2000 was $259,000, up 20.5
percent from $215,000 a year earlier, according to DataQuick
Information Systems.
"There is going to be a major
shift into attached housing just for survival purposes,"
Kretowicz said.
Brookfield Homes in San Diego has more
than 260 condominium units under construction in Scripps Ranch. Steve
Doyle, president of the company, also serves as president of the local
Building Industry Association. Despite the pressing need for
multiple-family housing, he expects most builders to proceed
cautiously into the market.
"Builders are conservative by
nature," he said.
Kretowicz said his company will be
"actively searching for opportunities to do attached
housing" in 2001. "It's the only way we can provide anything
that approaches affordable."
Battleground
Meanwhile, foes of the Supreme Court
decision will be looking for ways to undermine the ruling in
Sacramento. Miller said he has been meeting regularly with other
defect-litigation lawyers and homeowner groups to plan a legislative
lobbying campaign.
"We currently are working on
legislation and we fully expect it to be introduced this session to
basically neutralize the (Supreme Court) decision," the attorney
said.
Miller envisions "a simple piece
of legislation that will say a building code violation is a
construction defect, regardless of whether it presently is causing
property damage or not."
"Florida has that statute,"
he said. "Nevada has spelled out what a construction defect is. I
think it is time we cut to the chase and make it very simple."
Land-use planners say the future of
San Diegans must increasingly include multiple-family dwellings. The
region is running out of land for single-family developments.
According to the San Diego Association of Governments, the county must
add about 15,000 housing units annually to keep up with projected
population growth over the next 20 years. Based on existing general
and community plans countywide, there is a projected shortfall of
about 100,000 homes.
The association's economic and
land-use planners are calling for a "smart growth"
alternative that emphasizes higher-density housing in the urban core,
near mass transit lines and shopping centers.
If future generations are to own their
own homes in the San Diego region, builders and local planning
agencies will have to embrace condominiums and higher densities, said
Pattinson.
"We do have a housing
crisis," he said. "That crisis won't be solved without
affordable housing, multifamily and smart growth."

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